• Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Rapid greening of the Pilbara could unlock $250 billion in green iron annual exports

    Companies in the Pilbara need to think bigger if Australia is to achieve both emissions reductions goals and if they want to capitalise on an annual $250 billion green iron opportunity, says a new report. Miners and oil and gas companies need to accelerate plans to share their energy infrastructure and create a single common-user electricity grid, says the Superpowering Up report from think tank Climate Energy Finance (CEF). Ending the feudal approach to energy infrastructure in the Pilbara, where every company builds and owns generation and grids on their own patch, there is scope to add the estimated $50-100 billion of extra renewable energy generation needed to decarbonise Australia’s biggest mining region. Read more
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  • Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    AU Manufacturing | Study weighs up Pilbara’s green iron age opportunity

    A report released by think tank Climate Energy Finance (CEF) has claimed that decarbonising the Pilbara region of Western Australia is key to doubling Australian iron exports by value to $250 billion. The report, SUPERPOWERING-UP, was released on Tuesday and warns against continued inaction in greening the Pilbara’s energy supply. According to the report, only 2 per cent of the region’s electricity is from renewables, with “fragmented corporate energy production and grid transmission structures” standing in the way of progress. It identifies a single common-user electricity grid infrastructure (CUI) as the key ingredient in decarbonising the region. Read more
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  • Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Australian Mining | Climate think-tank urges on WA decarbonisation

    A new report has recommended the Pilbara invest in common-user infrastructure (CUI) to leverage Australia’s role in resources decarbonisation. ‘SUPERPOWERING-UP: Accelerating the electrification and decarbonisation of the Pilbara’ made several recommendations to the Federal Government, including investing in renewables-powered green metals refining, critical minerals processing and cleantech manufacturing. Among the recommendations to the WA Government was the prioritisation of the development of a comprehensive single CUI plan in the Pilbara region, and the legislation of the state’s Climate Change Bill 2023 to drive acceleration of net-zero across the state. Read more
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  • Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    New H2 | Report Posits Hydrogen as Crucial To Australia’s Green Iron Future

    A new CEF report has found that without immediate action to decarbonise the Pilbara – and harness hydrogen – Australia risks losing its place in the future green iron industry. A new report from Climate Energy Finance (CEF) warns that failing to decarbonise and electrify Western Australia’s Pilbara region could jeopardise Australia’s future in the green iron industry. The report, titled Superpowering-Up, highlights the critical role of hydrogen in transforming Australia’s iron ore exports into high-value green iron, positioning the country as a leader in the global renewable energy market. Read more
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  • Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Woodside’s US$2.35bn gamble raises doubts

    Last week, Australian oil and gas company Woodside Energy Group Ltd announced it would buy Texas’ OCI Clean Ammonia Holding BV, a company outside Woodside’s core area of expertise. Analyst Tim Buckley, founder and director of Climate Energy Finance, called the deal “a huge overpayment for a project that’s not even operational. “It’s such an ambitious and expensive first move; the risks are stacked against them.” Read more
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  • Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    OP ED | China’s Early Decarbonisation Holds Lessons for World

    fDI Intelligence – Powering ahead: China’s huge investment in clean energy manufacturing and installation means it will hit its 2030 decarbonisation targets six years early. China’s global leadership in the energy system’s decarbonisation is nothing short of astonishing. There is a significant chance that the country, which represented 56% of the world’s coal consumption in 2023 according to the Energy Institute, will reach peak coal demand later this year. National carbon emissions will potentially peak and then plateau in lock-step. Read more
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  • Aug, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Call to end nuclear power ban brings heated reaction in Australia

    Liddell Power Station in Australia’s Hunter Valley burned through coal for five decades before closing last year. Opposition leader Peter Dutton now wants Liddell to be reborn as something banned in the country for a quarter of a century: a nuclear power plant. Tim Buckley, director of the Climate Energy Finance think-tank, said the opposition’s proposals would displace private capital with a “communist-style policy” requiring more than A$100bn of public funds. “It is not impossible, but it is financially illogical,” said Buckley, who questioned the move’s political motivations ahead of an election. “This is not nuclear versus renewables. This is about extending the climate wars.” Read more
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  • Jul, 2024 CEF in the media

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    FDi Intelligence | CIP bets A$16bn on nascent Aussie offshore wind

    Star of the South was first pioneered by three Australians back in 2012, before CIP bought into the project in 2017 when it was already one of the industry’s biggest players. “That was a huge shot of confidence to the Victorian government and the federal government,” says Tim Buckley, founder of think tank Climate Energy Finance. Australia’s potential has not been lost on the industry heavyweights. Orsted, RWE, Iberdrola and BlueFloat Energy also won Australian feasibility licences. “We’ve got almost every non-Chinese and non-Indian major global [developer] vying to build offshore wind in Australia,” says Mr Buckley. Read more
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  • Jul, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Generators fill their pockets again, pushing grid prices to new highs and leaving renewables to cop the blame

    Battery storage is supposed to throw a bit more competition into the market. But the problem is that many of these assets are now owned or contracted to the very same energy giants that control the rest of the generation. If anything, it’s made it easier for them to control prices and profits. And being in the grip of the big energy players doesn’t feel like a safe place to be at the moment, especially with gas prices at such highs – five times the price of other international markets – according to Tim Buckley, from Climate Energy Finance. And it gives the Coalition plenty to crow about, something that is now taking hold in the minds of the public. Read more
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  • Jul, 2024 CEF in the media

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    French nuclear giant scraps SMR plans due to soaring costs, will start over

    EdF, which is now fully government owned after facing potential bankruptcy due to delays and massive cost over-runs at its latest generation large scale nuclear plants, had reportedly been working on a new design for SMRs for the last four years. Tim Buckley, from Climate and Energy Finance, seized on the news and called on Opposition leader Peter Dutton and energy spokesman Ted O’Brien to provide more details of their nuclear plans beyond the one page press release they released last month. “Come’on guys, how naive do you take the average Australian voter for?” Buckley wrote. “In your alternate fact world, who do you think will pay for the permanent around 50% increase in Australian energy prices for consumers? Are you really intent on destroying the international competitiveness of Australian industry purely in the service of your fossil fuel funders?” Read more
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  • Jun, 2024 CEF in the media

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    Coal Push Damps Hopes of China’s Climate Ambition

    To have a chance of combating climate change, the world needs President Xi Jinping’s administration to find a way to decarbonise China’s economy. The country, with 1.4bn people and a massive industrial economy still highly dependent on coal, is the world’s biggest polluter — accounting for nearly one-third of global carbon emissions. Xuyang Dong, an analyst with CEF, says rapid reductions in the cost of wind, solar and battery storage technologies have sparked a “dramatic” change in the economics underpinning China’s energy system. Dong and colleagues predict that coal will fade over the next 16 years from being a central pillar of China’s power sector to a “back-up role” ensuring stability during the transition to renewables. Read more
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  • Jun, 2024 CEF in the media

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    OP ED | Nuclear plan is fiscal irresponsibility on an epic scale and rank political opportunism

    While the Coalition has failed to release any detail or costings, today we have confirmation that if it gets into office, Australians will be paying a mult-billion dollar “nukebuilder” tax for generations to come for a national build out of government-owned nuclear reactors across seven locations, including on the sites of former coal-fired power stations. It beggars belief that opposition leader Peter Dutton proposes nationalising a nuclear public debt bomb and detonating it at the heart of energy policy in this country. Read more
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